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US History since 1865

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The Iron Curtain Speech (3/5/1946) ... I had to leak stuff all over the place. Because the Justice Department would not prosecute it. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: US History since 1865


1
US History since 1865
  • The Coming of the Cold War

2
The Story of the Bomb (I)
  • a. the idea originated in Germany scientists
    driven away, slowing down the German research
  • b. FDR was alerted of the split of the uranium
    atom from a letter by Albert Einstein in 1939
  • c. Manhattan Project was created on August 13,
    1942, eventually spending over 2 billion to
    build the bombs
  • d. The first chain reaction was achieved at the
    University of Chicago on December 2, 1942

3
The Story of the Bomb (II)
  • e. Gigantic labs were built in Oak Ridge, TN,
    Hartofrd, WA and Los Alamos, NM
  • f. A successful test was conducted on July 16,
    1945 in the NM desert.  "A few laughed a few
    cried, most remained silent, shocked at the
    energy they had released.  In the words of Robert
    Oppenheimer, "I am becoming death, the shatterer
    of worlds.  We are all S.O.B.s."
  • g. It did not take too long to decide where and
    when to drop the bombs.  Two were built and both
    were used.

4
The Story of the Bomb (III)
  • h. The Potsdam Declaration was issued on July 25,
    demanding Japan to surrender unconditionally or
    face utter destruction.
  • i. The first one was dropped on Hiroshima on
    August 6, 1945.  The Soviet Union declared war on
    Japan the next day. The second one was dropped on
    August 9, 1945.  As many as 140,000 people in
    Hiroshima and 80,000 in Nagasaki may have died
    from the bombings by the end of 1945 j. Japan
    surrendered on August 14, 1945 when U.S. agreed
    to allow it to keep the monarchy

5
The Debate on the Use of the Bomb (I)
  • For the use of the bomb
  • Truman, "Japs are savages, ruthless, merciless
    and fanatic."
  • To destroy Japan's capacity to make war
  • To shorten the war so as to save American lives
  • To humiliate the enemy which had humiliated the
    U.S. in Pearl Harbor
  • To intimidate Russians to be manageable in
    Eastern Europe Churchill "It was now no longer
    necessary for the Russians to come into the
    Japanese war.  The new explosive alone was
    sufficient to settle the matter."
  • To justify to Congress and the people the
    expenditure of 2 billion

6
The Debate on the Use of the Bomb (II)
  • Against the use of the bomb
  • US had no major military operations planned
    before November 1945 plenty of time to wait and
    see
  • bomb was not planned for a military target
  • Americans expected Russians to join the war on
    August 8 but they dropped the bomb on August 6
    and 9
  • Truman inexperienced and ignorant "I hope for
    some sort of peace--but I fear that machines are
    ahead of morals by some centuries and when morals
    catch up perhaps there will be no reason for any
    of it.  I hope not.  But we are only termites on
    a planet and maybe when we bore too deeply into
    the planet there will be a reckoning--who knows?"
  • Truman never told Stalin about the bomb except to
    say that the US had a new weapon
  • US never informed Japan that it was willing not
    to dethrone the emperor
  • Japanese viewed as a less superior race

7
The Debate on the Use of the Bomb (III)
  • Final Outcome
  • Japan was punished enough and Americans were
    apologetic
  • Japan was turned into a peaceful nation
  • It stopped the Russian Red Army's march and
    avoided a three power occupation of Japan

8
The Poland Issue
  • a. Stalin "Poland is not only a question of
    honor but of life and death for the Soviet
    Union."
  • b. West It is the outpost of European
    civilization holding back the slavs and the
    Asians ready to overrun the continent.
  • c. Truman v. Molotov the former yelled at the
    latter like a Missouri mule driver "Carry your
    agreements and you won't get talked like that."
  • d. growing suspicion and lend-lease shipments to
    the Soviet Union suspended on V-E day
  • e. Desiring to have oil concessions in Iran,
    Stalin refused to withdraw Russian troops strong
    and stern warning from Truman Russians withdrew

9
The Iron Curtain Speech (3/5/1946) 
  • a. Winston Churchill, in Fulton, Missouri,
    declaring that an iron curtain was falling across
    Europe.  He wanted to lift the curtain, to
    liberate Eastern Europe, and to hold back the
    Russians.  He suggested a fraternal association
    of the English-speaking peoples
  • b. Stalin responded with full fury of a wounded
    animal, accusing  Churchill of being a racist
    like Hitler
  • c. Within weeks, Stalin rejected membership to
    World Bank and IMF and launched an ideological
    campaign to eradicate Western influences

10
The Truman Doctrine (1947) (I)
  • a. Demobilization in the U.S. army strength from
    8 million to one million navy from 3.5 million
    to less than one million
  • b. Marshall no resources to give Russia or China
    hell
  • c. February 21, 1947, the British ambassador
    informed the State Department that London could
    no longer provide aid to Greece and Turkey
  • d. If Greece were lost, Turkey would be
    untenable one rotten apple would infect the
    whole barrel
  • e. Arthur Vanderberg, Republican chair of the
    Senate Foreign Affairs Committee advised Truman
    that to push through an aid bill he had to "scare
    the hell out of the American people."

11
The Truman Doctrine (1947) (II)
  • f. On March 12, Truman addressed the joint
    session of Congress, declaring "I believe that it
    must be the policy of the United States to
    support free peoples who are resisting attempted
    subjugation by armed minorities or by outside
    pressures."
  • g. This defined American foreign policy for the
    next generation and beyond to help all
    anti-Communist powers with economic, political
    and military assistance
  • h. On May 15, Congress appropriated 400 million
    for Greece and Turkey for the first time in its
    history the U.S. had chosen to intervene during a
    period of general peace in the affairs of peoples
    outside North and South Americas

12
The Marshall Plan (1947) (I)
  • a. Europe was in economic reconstruction and
    needed massive aid
  • b. Only with a healthy economy could Europe
    support the troops necessary to stop the Red Army
  • c. Only with a robust economy could infiltration
    of Communism be prevented
  • d. The participation of Germany was crucial
  • e. Russians were nominally included but the
    conditions were such that their inclusion was an
    impossibility
  • f. On June 5, 1947, Marshall gave a speech at
    Harvard and invited European nations to gather
    themselves and draw up a plan for economic aid

13
The Marshall Plan (1947) (II)
g. At the end of August 16 nations submitted a
plan calling for an economic aid package of 28
billion over four years h. It was reduced to 17
billion and presented to Congress for approval
i. It was called an international WPA, a bold
socialist blueprint, a European TVA, a
meaningless waste of American money. j. It was
passed by Congress in December in the wake of the
Communist coup in Czechoslovakia
14
The National Security Act (1947)
  • a. creation of a defense department
  • b. creation of the joint chief of staff
  • c. creation of the NSC
  • d. creation of the CIA--later authorized to
    engage in clandestine operations directed against
    Soviet Union and Communists elsewhere
  • e. separation of the Army and the Air Force

15
George Kennan and "The Source of Soviet Conduct"
(1947) (I)
a. His article published in Foreign Affairs under
the name of "X" b. He argued that Soviet were
motivated by two beliefs the innate antagonism
between capitalism and Socialism the sense of
humiliation and insecurity c. Moscow had a goal
of world conquest but it was patient and
tenacious and its political action a fluid stream
moving toward a given goal d. However, Russians
did not pose a military threat and did not want
war it was a political as well as an economic
challenge e. It should be met  with "long-term,
patient but firm and vigilant containment."
16
George Kennan and "The Source of Soviet Conduct"
(1947) (II)
  • The Soviet Union would eventually collapse
    because
  • the lack of balance between internal security and
    the terrible cost of human life and energies
  • the creeping in of disillusionment
  • uneven industrial development
  • instable transfer of power
  • inborn disunity and instability
  • the Soviet movement an afterglow still shining on
    the discontented people
  • no mystical, Messianic movement ever succeeded in
    world history

17
The Berlin Blockade (1948)
  • a. Merger of the three powers and the creation of
    West Germany
  • b. Russians responded by blockading Berlin and on
    all water and ground traffic
  • c. Talk of surrendering Berlin was dropped in the
    fear of a chain reaction
  • d. Berlin airlift was launched 13,000 tons of
    goods were flown into Berlin for the next eleven
    months

18
The Moscow Had the Bomb and the NSC-68
a. On September 22, 1949, the Soviet Union
exploded its first nuclear device b. Senator
Vanderberg remarked that "This is going to be a
different world." c. On January 30, 1950, Truman
authorized the State Department to make an
overall review and reassessment of American
foreign and defense policy in the light of the
loss of China, the Soviet mastery of atomic
energy and prospect of the fusion bomb d. It was
the first comprehensive statement of national
strategy in the Cold War period e. It extended
the Truman Doctrine and turned the US into a
global police. f. It was not implemented until
the war in Korea broke out.
19
The Loss of China (1949)
  • a. The Nationalist and Communist struggles
  • b. The Marshall Mission
  • c. The retreat of the Nationalist government
  • d. The White Paper blaming the loss of China on
    Chiang Kai-shek and declared that US could not
    prevent the coming to power of the Communists in
    China short of massive military intervention.

20
The Korean War (I)
  • a. War broke out on June 25, 1950 when the North
    invaded the South
  • b. With the Soviets boycotting the UN, decision
    was made to intervene with forces from 16 nations
  • c. The Inchon landing routed the North Korean
    troops in September 1950
  • d. Chinese gave warning that UN forces should not
    cross the 38th Parallel
  • e. General MacArthur was determined to roll
    across the Parallel and unify the Korean
    peninsular

21
The Korean War (II)
  • f. Wake Island meeting between President Truman
    and General MacArthur
  • g. Chinese volunteers intervened massively on
    October 25, 1950
  • h. MacArthur called for an all out war against
    China, including dumping nuclear waste along the
    Yalu River
  • i. Truman fired MacArthur in April 1951--taking
    on China would involve us in the wrong war at the
    wrong place at the wrong time with the wrong
    enemy
  • j. Ceasefire was reached on June 24, 1951 but
    final truce was not signed until July 1953

22
The Korean War (III)
A map of the Korean War
23
The Second Red Scare (I)
  • a. The Ameriasia Affair in 1945 with the arrest
    of Philip Jaffe and John Service
  • b. Truman began the loyalty program in the
    federal government in March 1947
  • c. The Alger Hiss case in 1949
  • d. Nixon won national fame due to his pursuit of
    Alger Hiss and won the senate race in California
  • e. The Rosenbergs were arrested in 1950,
    convicted and executed in 1953

24
The Second Red Scare (II)
  • f. Joseph McCarthy led the crusade against
    Communist elements in the US government (205, 81
    and 57)
  • e. McCarthy "lied with wild abandon he lied
    without evident fear he lied vividly and with
    bold imagination he lied, often, with very
    little pretense of telling the truth."
  • f. led to the passage of the McCarran Internal
    Security Act over Turman's veto.  This law made
    it unlawful to "combine, conspire, or agree with
    any other person to perform any act which would
    substantially contribute to the establishment of
    a totalitarian dictatorship."
  • g. McCarthy was censured.

25
The Second Red Scare (III)
26
The Second Red Scare (IV)
  • "We won the Hiss case in the papers.  We did.  I
    had to leak stuff all over the place.  Because
    the Justice Department would not prosecute it. 
    Hoover didn't even cooperate.  It was won in the
    papers.  We have to develop a program, a program
    for leaking out information.  We're destroying
    these people in the papers."
  • "I had Hiss convicted before he got to the grand
    jury....I no longer have the energy, but we
    need a son of a bitch who will work his butt off
    and do it dishonorably.  I know how to play the
    game and we're going to play it." July 1, 1971
  • "In the Hiss case they were all against me.  We
    never got a thing a leak out of the grand jury
    until they indicted." July 2, 1971

27
The Second Red Scare (IV)
28
The Game of Naming Names
  • a. Witch hunt in Hollywood b. Elia Kazan c.
    Lillian Hellman "There is no Communist menace in
    this country and you know it.  You have made
    cowards in liars, an ugly business. . ."  She
    refused to name names.  "Thank God somebody
    finally had the guts to do it."
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